Adoption of Natasha

759 N.E.2d 1210, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 441, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 1187
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedDecember 21, 2001
DocketNo. 01-P-613
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 759 N.E.2d 1210 (Adoption of Natasha) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adoption of Natasha, 759 N.E.2d 1210, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 441, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 1187 (Mass. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Kafker, J.

The mother appeals from a December 23, 1999, District Court order committing her sons, Adam and Michael, and her daughter, Natasha, to the permanent custody of the Department of Social Services (DSS) and dispensing with the need for her consent to their adoption.2 The mother claims that her trial was fatally flawed due to the participation of DSS, when the proposed adoptive mother of Natasha was, at all relevant times, a supervisor at the DSS office from which the biological family received services. She seeks disqualification of DSS, a remand, and the appointment of a private agency to investigate and, if necessary, present a petition. Although we affirm the District Court judge’s decision, as his findings are supported by the record and taken together prove clearly and convincingly that the mother is currently unfit, we are troubled by DSS’s disregard of its own procedures as well as protocols established by the case law.

1. Proceedings in District Court. Trial on the DSS petition to terminate parental rights began on April 12, 1999, and continued over six trial days, concluding on May 11, 1999. Sixteen witnesses testified, including two former and three current DSS employees who were involved with the mother and the children at various points from 1994 to 1999. In addition to numerous DSS service plans and foster care reviews, the judge admitted in evidence five separate reports of an independent court investigator and three reports of two different guardians ad litem, none of whom were DSS employees.

Before trial, the mother made a motion to dismiss, on which the judge delayed ruling, based on DSS’s failure to comply with the regulation prohibiting the placement of children with [443]*443DSS employees in offices serving them.3 The regulation provides as follows: “A child in the custody of the Department and whose case is managed by the Department may be placed in a Department employee’s home (approved and supervised by a private agency) unless the child is from the employee’s own area (if the employee works in an area office).” 110 Code Mass. Regs. § 7.106(3) (1998). On the third day of trial, the judge denied the mother’s motion to dismiss for failure to comply with the regulation, ruling that DSS’s was but a “minor technical violation.”4 The mother did not appeal the denial of the motion to dismiss at that time.5

2. Background and findings. The facts recited below were found by the judge unless otherwise indicated. After the birth of her first child Adam, the mother became involved with the Good Start Program. According to her contact in the program, Esther Pardo of the Massachusetts Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children (MSPCC), the mother moved six times in a year and one-half,6 roughly treated Adam, and allowed drinking and drug use in the family’s apartment.

The mother first became known to DSS on June 23, 1993, [444]*444when a G. L. c. 119, § 51 A, report was filed alleging her neglect and emotional maltreatment of Adam and Michael. A follow-up investigation concluded that the mother was unable to provide adequate care for the children and that she was verbally abusive to them. The children were reported to have missed numerous pediatric appointments from March, 1992, to February, 1994, including appointments for immunizations. In September, 1993, the father of Adam and Michael, who had a long criminal history, returned to live with the mother and the children.

In April, 1994, DSS filed a care and protection petition alleging that the children were at risk of emotional, physical, and medical neglect. On April 15, 1994, after a seventy-two hour hearing, DSS was granted legal custody of Adam and Michael while physical custody remained with the mother. After Natasha was born on Inly 21, 1994,7 the mother neglected to take advantage of home-based counseling and services made available to her through MSPCC and Catholic Charities and did not send her children to the day care program in which they were enrolled.8

In November, 1994, the mother moved from her apartment with the three children without notifying DSS of her new address. DSS immediately petitioned for and was granted physical as well as legal custody of the three children. All three were placed in foster care at that time, Adam and Michael with the Smith family,9 and Natasha with the Iones family. In December, the mother reported to DSS that the father of Adam and Michael had been incarcerated for armed robbery while masked.

DSS social workers counseled the mother over the next year and one-half, with the goal of reunifying her with her children. Toward this end, they required that she attend parenting classes and individual therapy, as well as obtain adequate housing. She worked with at least three private social services agencies, but her attendance at scheduled appointments was erratic, and she [445]*445was terminated from two of the programs. DSS continued to supervise visits between the mother and her children until February, 1996, when unsupervised visits were allowed, as DSS determined she was in sufficient compliance with her service plans.

The mother was arrested for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon in April, 1996, and briefly held on bail, when the police found a woman who had argued with the mother bleeding from her forearm and left breast area. The mother was found in possession of a “box knife.” At that time, it was also ascertained that she was in violation of her probation. She pleaded guilty to the probation violation and received a sentence for assault and battery with a dangerous weapon for which she was incarcerated from October 14, 1996, to August 28, 1997.

DSS changed its goal for the children from reunification to adoption in October, 1996, two weeks after the mother was incarcerated at M.C.I., Framingham. On March 5, 1997, while the mother was still in prison, DSS amended the care and protection petition to include a request that the court terminate parental rights.10

Although the judge did not make specific findings regarding the involvement of Ms. Doe, the DSS employee who is the preadoptive mother, with the biological mother and her children, it is uncontested that Ms. Doe first saw Natasha in the course of Ms. Doe’s work in the DSS office. See Bruno v. Bruno, 384 Mass. 31, 35 (1981); Adoption of Lorna, 46 Mass. App. Ct. 134, 135 (1999). The Doe family came forward as potential adoptive parents in November of 1997.

The judge also made the following findings: The biological mother was released from prison at the end of August, 1997, and moved into a two bedroom apartment with her then boyfriend and his brother. In mid-February, 1998, the mother began attending therapy sessions as required by her DSS service plan. As reported by a clinician from the Lawrence Psychological Center, the mother failed to attend five of thirteen scheduled therapy sessions and terminated the sessions altogether when [446]*446her fifth child, Karl, was bom in August, 1998. In May, 1998, her boyfriend, with whom the mother was still living, was shot while in a car with some friends. On July 15, 1998, the mother’s sister, who had custody of Andrea, sought and was granted a restraining order against the mother and her boyfriend, after she saw him break her car windows.

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Bluebook (online)
759 N.E.2d 1210, 53 Mass. App. Ct. 441, 2001 Mass. App. LEXIS 1187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adoption-of-natasha-massappct-2001.